Blog

CALM Your Ad Down

Date
19 Dec 2012
Author
Brandon
Keep Calm and Watch Icon poster

Loud commercial breaks during your favorite television shows are now a thing of the past, after the FCC passed an ordinance last week regulating the volume of television commercials.

According to a press release issued by the FCC, “The Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation Act (CALM) requires TV stations, cable operators, satellite TV providers and other pay TV providers to limit a commercial’s average volume to the same average volume as the programming it accompanies.”

Originally adopted in 2011, the Act took effect last Thursday, giving television providers one year to update their equipment in order to be in compliance with the new rules.

The FCC stated the Act was put into place because volume complaints have been the top consumer issue for the last decade.

So households without DVRs or newer televisions with auto volume controls will no longer have to reach for the remote during a commercial break.

While the Act itself is not necessarily bad, advertisers will now need to be more creative when it comes to the visual appeal of commercials, and not rely on the high volume interruptions.

The Act can be a positive for agencies, driving more visual creativity. Agencies will now need to utilize their research when choosing colors, create more interesting characters and require more action. Integration with other mediums, such as social media, is also another option. Think using apps like Shazam or driving consumers to Facebook, Twitter or YouTube to see different versions of commercials or to find out conclusions like Nissan or GoDaddy.com.

And of course there have been complaints about the noise level coming from TV sets across America.

According to tvb.org, television is also still the number one advertising medium, even with digital growth soaring.

Among the people surveyed aged 18 and older, 40 percent said television is the number one source where they learned about products they would like to try or buy from television commercials, and said it was the most influential in their purchasing decisions.

What effect it will have is still not known, but the average American spending 20 percent of their day watching TV (Nielson.com), commercials will remain high on advertisers radars.

And for advertisers not adhering to the new rule, watch out!

The FCC has developed a special Loud Commercial Online Complaint Form for consumers to file complaints that can be found at https://consumercomplaints.fcc.gov/hc/en-us.

The FCC said they will use complaints to enforce the new rules.

We here at The Brandon Agency welcome the change and look forward to continuing to push the boundaries of commercial creativity.

What are your thoughts on the CALM Act? Let us know!

Subscribe to our Newsletter
Don't miss out on our latest news and commentary and white papers, subscribe to our newsletter now!
You may also like
phone shopping
Blog

How Brands Can Prepare for ChatGPT’s Instant Checkout

You’ve likely heard the buzz: ChatGPT’s new Instant Checkout feature is reshaping the landscape of online shopping. The update lets users research and buy products directly inside ChatGPT, skipping the traditional website experience entirely. That means fewer clicks betw...
apparel
Blog

Driving Growth in the Apparel Market With Cross-Channel Campaigns

If you're in the apparel game, you already know how competitive the landscape is. Trends move fast, customer loyalty is fickle, and attention spans are even shorter. Getting people to notice your brand is hard. Turning that attention into real growth? Even harder.
media buying
Blog

Strategic Media Buying: How to Maximize Ad Spend Across Digital and Traditional Channels

Media buying is a power play. It must be as sharp and adaptive as you are. Your media buying strategy must consider data, channel cohesion, context, and creativity for success in today’s evolving digital and traditional channels. Because let’s face it: Poor placement can...
Security Finance
security finance hero
From local lender to lifeline: How we turned trust into an acquisition engine
Primal Pet Foods
primal pet hero image
The campaign didn’t just land—it echoed. Sales lifted, buzz spread, and the pack grew.